Homemade Granola Bars

These homemade granola bars are full of nuts and fruit, perfect for a backpacking trek or packing in a lunch!

After lots of trial and error, I’m happy to present to you fun, yummy and (mostly) healthy homemade granola bars! If you’re reading this, we’re on a real-life vacation! But not the relaxing-on-a-beach kind…We’re in Scotland, currently traveling along the John Muir Way, a 134-mile walking trail from Helensburgh to Dunbar (west-to-east coast). I may die when we get home, but we’re probably having a great time so far!

For our lunches and snacks, we brought a big stash of various protein bars, and also made some of our own. They’ve got protein in the nuts, nut butter and chia seeds, fiber in the oats, and sweetness in chocolate and fruit.

This makes an 8×8 sheet pan of bars. It’s a great amount for snacking for the whole week, or on trips like us! I found out you can’t bring straight peanut butter on a plane, because it’s considered “liquid,” but if it’s mixed into these delicious treats it’s safe to bring along.

Local & Homemade Spotlight: Honey, Probiotic Granola & Peanut Butter

Today’s honey was brought to your by Roark Farms. It was recently also used in this springy spritzer! You can find the special granola with Jared’s Probiotics. It is a raw, kefir-soaked granola made with love and awesomeness. I found Jared for the first time nearly two years ago, because I had an insatiable obsession with popsicles and he sold them at the farmers market! It sells out fast though, so get your orders in today! Finally, the peanut butter is homemade! You can find that recipe here too.

I hope that you have a chance to make these bars! And also go on vacation! You deserve it.

Instructions

When well combined, pour wet ingredients into dry ingredients and combine gently with a spatula, until all the dry ingredients are fully coated.

Line an 8x8 sheet pan with parchment paper and spray with cooking spray.

Scoop mixture into the pan, gently pressing to pack down tightly.

Bake the bars for 35-40 minutes, until the edges have turned brown and the center begins to brown as well.

Remove from the oven and let cool completely before slicing.

Carefully lift the parchment out of the pan and place square of granola on a cutting board. Cut into squares or bars with a sharp knife.

Store in airtight containers.

#enJOY!

Recipe Notes

Note 1: It worked best if the cashew pieces were smaller than they came. I crushed them with a meat tenderizing hammer, but you can also process them down a tiny bit in the food processor also, if that works better for you. You may also need to crush the big pieces in the probiotic granola also.

Note 2: I made my oat flour by just giving my quick oats into my food processor and giving them a whir until they made a flour-like texture.

these sound so good! they look like they’re holding up really well, especially considering that there’s not much sugar/syrup. quick question about the matcha green tea blueberry probiotic granola: do you make that yourself (and if so, where’s the recipe? it sounds moreish just on its own!), or where do you buy that?

It took a lot of tries – breaking the cashews up a little smaller than halves helped a ton. Also the oat flour helped make it bake more like a “brownie” type of baked good. The probiotic granola can be found at Jared’s ProPops (referral link). He makes tons of probiotic snacks!